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Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden Time

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L UCKENB0OT.S AND PARLIAMENT CLOSE. I99 Gay, the poet,-who, during the latter years of his life, seems to have been as regularly installed into the household of the Duchess of Queensberry as ever any court-minstrel was in a palace of old,-accompanied his patroness to Edinburgh, and resided for some time in the Canongate, at Queensberry House. He became, as was to be anticipated, a frequent visitor of the Scottish poet, and is said to have derived great amusement from Ramsay’s humorous descriptions of the leading citizens as they daily assembled at the Cross, within sigh€ of his windows. That central spot “where merchants most do congregate,” was then a.dorned with the ancient structure demolished in 1756, and formed the daily promenade for the ruffled and powdered exquisite to display his finery, no less than for the trader bent only on business. The wits of Edinburgh used to meet there, at the poet’s shop, to amuse themselves with the intelligence of the day, and the most recent news in the world of letters. The late William Tytler, Esq., of Woodhouselee, had frequently seen Gay among these literary gossips, and described him as 8 pleasant-looking little man with a tye-wig. He recollected overhearing him desire Ramsay>o explain many of the Scottish words and allusions to national customs that occur in the Gentle Shepherd, and which he engaged on his return to England to communicate to Pope, who was already an admirer of the beauties of that admirable pastoral.’ The prospect, however, from Allan Ramsay’s window, possessed other attractions for the poet besides the grave and humorous glimpses of human nature it afforded; for, owing to the singular site of the Scottish capital, it commanded, although in the very heart of the town, a view for many miles into the country, looking across Preston Bay to the fertile landscape of East Lothian, and the heights that skirt the German Ocean. Allan Ramsay’s library and business were transferred by his successor, Mr James Macewan, to the shop below ; and from him they passed into the hands of Mr Alexander Kincaid, an eminent bookseller and publisher, and a man of highly cultivated mind, who took an active share in the management of civic affairs, and died while filling the ofice of Lord Provost, January 2184 1777. He was interred with all the honours due to his rank, and his funeral appears to have excited an universal sensation at the period.’ During his time the old land acquired an additional interest as a favourite lounge of Smollett, who visited Edinburgh in 1776, and resided for some time at his sister’s house in the Canongate. He appears to have derived the same amusement as Gay from watching the curious groups that daily assembled in front of this ancient tenement. In the lively account of his visit given in Humphrey Clinker, he remarks--“ All the people of business at Edinburgh, and even the genteel company, may be seen standing in crowds every day, from one to two in the afternoon, in the open street, at a place where formerly stood a marketcross, a curious piece of Gothic architecture, still to be seen in Lord Somerville’s garden in this neighbourhood” Kincaid was succeeded in the shop and business by Mr William Creech, in whose hands this haunt of the Muses suffered no diminution of its attractions. Ee received a liberal education in early life; added to which, an inexhaustible fund of amusing anecdote, and great conversational powers, served through life to make his society be courted by the most eminent men of hk time, notwithstanding the acquirement latterly of penurious habits, and such a miserly keenness for money, as precluded not benevolence 1 Scot. Mag., July 1802. 1 A particular account of the funeral is given by h o t , Appendix, No. XI.
Volume 10 Page 218
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